The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Crooner sings praises of NHS after bypass op

ARBROATH: Alan thanks medical staff and his legion of fans after suffering heart attack during live Facebook show

- Thumbs up from Alan Mowatt who is recuperati­ng at home after a triple bypass operation. GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

A recuperati­ng singer, on the mend after a triple bypass following a live online performanc­e heart attack, has spoken of the “overwhelmi­ng” support he has received in the wake of his brush with tragedy.

Arbroath’s Alan Mowatt became unwell during a Live Fae Oor Living Room Facebook concert which he and wife Val had been staging weekly to raise funds for the NHS during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The popular entertaine­r thought chest pains were just indigestio­n and returned to the mic to belt out a string of favourites for more than an hour – resuming with the words “How lucky can one guy be?” from the Dean Martin hit Ain’t That A Kick In The Head.

Minutes after the curtain came down, however, a call to NHS 24 triggered an emergency response which saw the 61-year-old rushed to hospital where it emerged he had suffered a heart attack.

Painter and decorator Alan was transferre­d to Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, where he underwent the triple bypass operation and is now recovering at his home in Arbroath.

“It will take time, but I am just so glad to have come out the other side of this,” said the convalesci­ng crooner, who is particular­ly well-known for his Rat Packera talent which has raised thousands of pounds for good causes.

“It really makes you think about things – you’re flying one moment and the next you’re grounded.”

Looking back to the July 3 drama, Alan said: “I had been feeling unwell in the lead up to it and I just put it down to being a bit clammy, took a wee rest and carried on.

“Val and I had been doing the concerts for eight weeks on the trot and we didn’t repeat songs unless they were requests, so that was 18 hours of music in total. We’d do quite a bit of preparatio­n during the week, so maybe it all just caught up.”

He added: “I can’t say enough about the care I got – between NHS 24, the paramedics, coronary care and Ward 1 at Ninewells and then Edinburgh Royal, they have all been amazing.”

Arbroath-born West End star Norman Bowman led a Love for Al Facebook campaign with messages of support coming from around the globe.

“It’s been quite overwhelmi­ng to be honest, to have 900 people wishing you all the best is really something,” he said.

The singer would love to be back at the mic stand as soon as he can but will be following doctor’s orders on the long and winding road back to full health.

“It looks like 2020 might just have to be put aside, but I’m just glad to be around to be able to do that,” he said.

I had been feeling unwell in the lead up to it and I just put it down to being a bit clammy, took a wee rest and carried on. ALAN MOWATT

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